| Literature DB >> 28936206 |
Adele Costabile1, Triana Bergillos-Meca1, Loretta Landriscina2, Antonio Bevilacqua2, Isidro Gonzalez-Salvador1, Maria R Corbo2, Leonardo Petruzzi2, Milena Sinigaglia2, Carmela Lamacchia2.
Abstract
Recently, an innovative gluten detoxification method called Gluten FriendlyTM (GF) has been developed. It induces structural modifications, which abolish the antigenic capacity of gluten and reduce the in vitro immunogenicity of the most common epitopes involved in celiac disease, without compromising the nutritional and technological properties. This study investigated the in vitro effects of GF bread (GFB) on the fecal microbiota from healthy and celiac individuals by a three-stage continuous fermentative system, which simulates the colon (vessel 1, proximal colon; vessel 2, transverse colon; and vessel 3, distal colon), as well as on the production of short chain fatty acids (SCFA, acetate, propionate, butyrate). The system was fed with GFB and the changes in microbiota through fluorescence in situ hybridization and in SCFA content were assessed. GFB exerted beneficial modulations such as bifidogenic effects in each compartment of the model both with healthy- and celiac-derived samples, as well as growth in Clostridium clusters XIVa+b in celiac-derived samples. Furthermore, increased levels of acetic acid were found in vessel 1 inoculated with the fecal microbiota of healthy individuals, as well as acetic and propionic in vessel 1 and 2 with celiac-derived samples. In addition, the use of multivariate approaches showed that the supplementation of GFB could result in a different modulation of the fecal microbiota and SCFA, as a function of initial equilibrium.Entities:
Keywords: Gluten Friendly bread; celiac; fecal microbiota; gut model; healthy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28936206 PMCID: PMC5594085 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01722
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FISH oligonucleotide probes used in this study.
| Probe | Target bacterial group/species | Target sequence (5′–3′) | Hybridization/washing | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bifl64 | CATCCGGCATTACCACCC | 50–50 | ||
| Erec482 | GCTTCTTAGTCARGTACCG | 50–50 | ||
| Labl58 | GGTATTAGCAYCTGTTTCCA | 50–50 | ||
| Chisl50 | TTATGCGGTATTAATCTYCCTTT | 50–50 | ||
| Bac303 | CCAATGTGGGGGACCTT | 46–48 | ||
| Eub338 I∗ | Most bacteria (EUB) | GCTGCCTCCCGTAGGAGT | 46–48 | |
| Eub338 II∗ | Most bacteria (EUB) | GCAGCCACCCGTAGGTGT | 46–48 | |
| Eub338 III∗ | Most bacteria (EUB) | GCTGCCACCCGTAGGTGT | 46–48 | |